Our annual Open Day is fast approaching. Come along and see our beautiful paintings and have a natter!

Our annual Open Day is fast approaching. Come along and see our beautiful paintings and have a natter!

Fourteen members enjoyed two hours together being creative by drawing and painting portraits. After our recent soft pastel workshop it was good to see several artists using pastels for their portraits and pictures.


Some drew their grandchildren whilst others used images available online. There are a couple of finished portraits and the others will be completed at home or at the next Saturday session.












Some members drew and painted their own subjects.




Lovely to see so many at the session to have a good natter with! Please send any finished pastel animals or portraits to Tracy for putting on the blog. Thank you :o)
Our next session is on Saturday 24th May from 10am to 3pm with the subject being ‘The Diversity of Humanity’.
With the focus on portraits this month here’s what five members of the group, Susan, Brenda, Steve, Jane and Tracy, did during Adebanji Alade’s sketch week in March.
Local artist Adebanji lives in Gravesend and is President of the Royal Society of Oil Painters, the resident artist on BBC 1’s The One Show and a published author with his Addictive Sketcher books. He has an online art group sketching and painting and twice a year runs a sketch week open to the public for only £10 for 5 lessons. They’re at 7.30pm onwards but if you can’t watch a lesson live you have until the following Friday to watch and take part.
Once you sign up you’re sent a list of materials but if you have a sketchbook, pencils from 2B to 8B and a rubber, you don’t need any extras. At 7.30pm the session started online with a run through of materials and a chat about that day’s picture. Everyone is emailed the reference photos which have been taken by Adebanji or are free on the Unsplash website. You can print the pictures out or save them to your phone or tablet to use.
Adebanji showed how to grid the reference picture and then reduce the photo to external and internal angles, internal shapes, light lines, dark lines, light tones, middle tones, dark tones, erasing areas then reinstating darks. Whilst the sketches start loose the image suddenly appears and in an hour you are done. You’re encouraged not to fiddle with the sketch but to leave it as it is otherwise you try have a perfect sketch, but they not meant to be perfect. After sketching he encourages questions online from the public and spends another 30 minutes to an hour answering them.
You could join a Facebook page if you wanted to see what other artists created. In the week we drew two portraits, a figure, a landscape and an animal.














We all enjoyed the evenings sketching live or catching up and thought it was fantastic value at only a tenner learning from such an experienced tutor. Adebanji’s enthusiasm is infectious and you really want to do your best. It felt exhausting sketching and learning at the same time but you could pause the live programme then play it again. We all liked learning how to sketch like this and using blending stumps and hatching and will use everything we learned in our own sketches in the future. Follow Adebanji’s advice and don’t sketch for more than one hour, stop after 60 minutes and they will forever be a sketch and not a perfect drawing.
Here are Susan’s sketches that she drew live.





Brenda sketched the old man twice, once live and once on catch up. She also sketched a lily using the same techniques.






Steve did a couple of the sessions live then caught up by replaying the sessions on YouTube the following week.





Jane unfortunately had a problem with intermittent internet connection all week but sketched when she could see the sessions.


Tracy used an iPad for the reference pictures and after finding it difficult to swap between pencils quickly she used nail varnish to put dots on the pencils to see 2B to 8B much easier.







Well done everyone you did so well! Thank you for sharing your sketches to see what we learned during the week.
Adebanji’s next sketch week should be towards the end of the year, so hopefully more members will take the plunge and join in.
Peta’s sketches of independent London shops have been published online on the Spitalfields Life website. Drawn in pencil then coloured in brown, black and blue ink, the subject evokes life as it was with independent shops on every High Street.
They’re fantastic sketches, Peta, you have such an amazing skill with a pencil and brush.
Good luck with your exhibition that opens this week in London!
The sketches have been screenshot to add to this post, but to see the images on the Spitalfields Life site click here… https://spitalfieldslife.com/2025/02/24/peta-bridles-shops/
Click on the first image below to see the writing under each picture, then scroll right to see them all. If you’d like to comment please do so on the Spitalfields Life website at the bottom of the page.
















Peta has an exhibition soon of her amazing London sketches, full of character and skill.
From Wednesday 26th February to Tuesday 25th March in the cafe of The Good Shepherd Building, 15a Davies Lane, Leytonstone, London. The nearest transport is Leytonstone Station on the Central Line.
The private view is on Thursday 27th February from 6-8pm and all are welcome!
The exhibition will be a collection of pencil and ink sketches made on location around London, with 12 framed giclee prints on show and a selection of giclee prints for sale.
Please see the flyer for the exact address and opening times…

If you’re on Instagram do give Peta a follow.
Good luck with the exhibition, Peta, your artwork deserves to have a wider audience!

Peta has had her sketches of several City of London Churches published on the website ‘Spitalfields Life’. Beautifully and skilfully sketched in pencil and then coloured with soft tones of black, blue and brown inks, she has masterfully captured the atmosphere and tiny details of these churches and related items. Click on this link to see the sketches on the site… https://spitalfieldslife.com/2024/04/29/peta-bridles-city-churches/
Peta would be really interested in your comments, so please scroll to the end of the article on Spitalfields Life and submit a comment for her to see. You write your comment, add your name and email address, submit your comment and it appears on the site when approved.
The pictures from the site have been screenshot and are below, but the higher quality images are on Spitalfields Life. Look for where the last image was drawn. You will know the place because Peta started the drawing on our Saturday session in July 2023.
Click on the first picture then scroll through to see the pictures enlarged and with words that explain about each image.
Well done Peta, your sketches and use of the coloured inks are awesome!















